Pubdate: Tue, 29 Mar 2005 Source: Camrose Booster, The (CN AB) Copyright: 2005 The Camrose Booster Contact: http://www.camrosebooster.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/2438 Author: Alex Boos Note: headline by MAP STIFFER PENALTIES FOR MARIJUANA IS THE ANSWER Dear Editor: Re: Second Thought, Camrose Booster, Mar. 15/05 After reading Dr. Osbourne's article I was compelled to write. I cannot believe that we allow this type of thinking in our educational establishments. No wonder we have such difficulty controlling crime, when people such as Dr. Osbourne write articles practically encouraging people to flaunt the law! What's worse is the alarming errors that he, a professor of sociology, has included in his article! While not all marijuana users are responsible for the tragic deaths of the RCMP Officers in Mayerthorpe, it brings me to ask, would this have happened if there were no viable market for marijuana in the first place? If no one is using, then no one is buying. Certainly not all marijuana users are violent offenders, but presently, all marijuana users are criminals. The medicinal value of marijuana is minimal, and doctors still look to other, safer drugs to prescribe. I do not argue the notion of Roszko being a violent offender with a hatred for the RCMP. I do believe however, that we need stiffer penalties in more restrictive prisons. This combined with education on drugs and the causes of drug use and other criminal activity will do more to prevent crime and tragedies such as this from occurring than the legalization of marijuana. To compare those who are opposed to marijuana legalization as racists and relics from the past is equally discriminatory! The 'War on Drugs' is a losing battle. So is the war on speeding, murder, theft, cancer, AIDS, and numerous other afflictions on society. But we continue to fight them. Prohibition did not work in the past. It may not be the answer today. But if we adopt the attitude that 'if we cannot win we should give in', we may as well abolish all forms of law enforcement. We will never stop people from breaking the law. But with education and guidance, of which you sir should be a part of, we can hopefully curb the criminal element and activity within our borders. The reasons for drug use are similar to the reasons for using alcohol and tobacco. Both of which are currently legal, despite efforts to ban smoking from every aspect of human life. While alcohol and tobacco may kill more people than illegal drugs, we also need to look at the fallout from illegal drugs. Drugs such as crack cocaine and heroin which are both far more addictive than cigarettes and alcohol, the lethalness of drugs such as crystal meth and ecstasy, or the harm that comes from drugs such as rohipnol. This is not rhetoric, this is fact. Yes, as the war intensifies the drug trade becomes more lucrative. But is that a reason to stop the fight? Do you feel you are paying too much for marijuana? I do not use it, so it does not affect me. The solution here is, again, education combined with stiffer penalties for lawbreakers. Just like your study after study, conference after conference and expert after expert, they all conclude that drug use leads to other crime. Let us see you sing the praises of marijuana when someone steals your belongings in an effort to support their habit. How would you handle crack-addicted children? How would you encourage a marijuana-addicted teen to stop smoking and stay in school? These are all questions that 'Sociology' professors should be asking themselves and their students. We would serve ourselves better as a society to look more in depth at the causes of drug use and ways to combat it than to simply roll over and ignore it and hope it will go away. Decriminalization is not the answer. Education on the effects of drug use, the consequences of drug use, and the encouragement of youth to remain drug-free by school teachers, professors and other professionals are the key elements to 'winning' the war on drugs. We need more people siding with the law on this, and less siding with the criminals. Which side is yours? Alex Boos Camrose - --- MAP posted-by: Larry Seguin